28. Muhammad Wrote The Quran

Appendix 28

Muhammad Wrote God's Revelations With His Own Hand

The first revelation was "Read," and included the statement "God
teaches by means of the pen" (96:1-4), and the second revelation was
"The Pen" (68:1). The only function of the pen is to write.

Ignorant Muslim scholars of the first two centuries after the Quran
could not understand the Quran's challenge to produce anything like it.
They had no idea about the Quran's mathematical composition, and they
knew that many literary giants could have composed works comparable to
the Quran. In fact, many such literary giants did claim the ability to
produce a literary work as excellent as the Quran. The latest claim
came from Taha Hussein, the renowned Egyptian writer.

The ignorant Muslim scholars then decided to proclaim Muhammad an
illiterate man! They figured that this would make the Quran's
extraordinary literary excellence truly miraculous. The word they
relied on to bestow illiteracy upon the Prophet was "UMMY."
Unfortunately for those "scholars," this word clearly means "Gentile,"
or one who does not follow any scripture (Torah, Injeel, or Quran) [see
2:78, 3:20 & 75, 62:2]; it does NOT mean "illiterate."

The Prophet was a successful merchant. The "Muslim scholars" who
fabricated the illiteracy lie forgot that there were no numbers during
the Prophet's time; the letters of the alphabet were used as numbers.
As a merchant dealing with numbers every day, the Prophet had to know
the alphabet, from one to one-thousand.

The Quran tells us that Muhammad wrote down the Quran - Muhammad's
contemporaries are quoted as saying, "These are tales from the past
that he wrote down. They are being dictated to him day and night"
(25:5).You cannot "dictate" to an illiterate person. The Prophet's
enemies who accuse him of illiteracy abuse Verse 29:48, which relates
specifically to previous scriptures.

On the 27th night of Ramadan 13 B.H. (Before Hijerah), Muhammad the
soul, the real person, not the body, was summoned to the highest
universe and the Quran was given to him (2:97, 17:1, 44:3, 53:1-18,
97:1-5). Subsequently, the angel Gabriel helped Muhammad release a few
verses of the Quran at a time, from the soul to Muhammad's memory. The
Prophet wrote down and memorized the verses just released into his
mind. When the Prophet died, he left the complete Quran written down
with his own hand in the chronological order of revelation, along with
specific instructions as to where to place every verse. The divine
instructions recorded by the Prophet were designed to put the Quran
together into the final format intended for God's Final Testament to
the world (75:17). The early Muslims did not get around to putting the
Quran together until the time of Khalifa Rashed `Uthmaan. A committee
was appointed to carry out this task. Read Appendix 24 for the details.